I'm trying to love farts

Bethany Barton

Book - 2025

"Children's Choice Award winner Bethany Barton tackles the digestive system and all the farts that come along with it! As long as there have been people, there have been farts. And as long as there have been farts, they've been hilarious! Join Bethany Barton, creator of the award-winning I'm trying to Love . . . series, as she explores the digestive system, how food becomes energy, and what our bodies do with what is left over. Equal parts funny and informative, I'm Trying to Love Farts will leave you with a whole new appreciation for our bodily gases"-- Provided by publisher.

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
New York : Viking 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Bethany Barton (author)
Item Description
Title appears on cover and title page as "I'm trying to love farts," with the word "farts" crossed out and replaced by "flatulence"
Physical Description
pages cm
Audience
Ages Ages 4-8
Grades K-1
ISBN
9780593693773
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Continuing her valiant efforts to embrace the world's less lovable contents from spiders and math to garbage and germs, Barton offers a new addition to her series. Though the author/illustrator opens with a claim that farts have existed as long as humans--a howler she herself contradicts when she gets to introducing the far more ancient and "famously flatulent" termite--and even doubles down later with a similarly specious declaration about digestive system microbes, her overall assertion that passing gas is hilarious as well as natural and healthy is inarguable. After all, she notes, the oldest joke on record, going back nearly 4,000 years, is fart-related (she doesn't repeat it, alas). The illustrations reinforce both themes; between endpapers featuring visual representations of nearly two dozen distinctive poots, each labeled with a synonym for the act, a serious young lecturer provides a simple discourse on the causes and contents of farts as well as about animals that also produce them or, like sloths and birds, don't. The narrator is frequently derailed by a pesky brother's wisecracks and billowing clouds of noxiously hued funk. In the end, though, both tan-skinned children wind up "feeling the fart love," and perhaps readers will, too. Other human figures in the art are racially diverse, and one uses a wheelchair. A hilarious "toot salute" to the gas we pass. (fascinating facts on flatulence, further resources)(Informational picture book. 5-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.